The husband of State Rep. Marie P. St. Fleur, who says he is separated from his wife,
was arrested in a prostitution sting in Roxbury late Saturday night after he allegedly
offered an undercover female cop $40 for oral sex, according to a police report.

State Rep. Marie St. Fleur is pictured in a file photo. Her husband, Jean
Baptiste Lature, was arrested Saturday night. (Staff file photo)

Jean Baptiste Lauture, 47, of Dorchester, was arrested at the intersection of Blue Hill
Avenue and Woodcliff Street, police said.

This event is not connected to and is completely unrelated to my wife,
Lauture said in a press release sent by his attorney to the Herald at 5 p.m. today.
This has been a very difficult year. My wife and I are presently separated while we
work through our marital problems.

Lauture was arrested on a charge of soliciting sex for a fee and booked at
Roxburys District 2 station. His 1993 Infiniti was towed, according to the police
report. His lawyer, Ernst Guerrier, entered a plea of not guilty on his behalf at his
arraignment at Roxbury District Court.

The bust was part of Operation Squeeze, a crackdown on prostitution in the hot-spot
neighborhood that netted four other men over the weekend.

I apologize for any ill feelings or embarrassment this story may bring to my
wife, my children, my extended family and my community, Lauture said in the release.
I expect to be exonerated of all charges once all the facts are revealed. I ask for
your prayers.

A spokesperson for St. Fleur, a Dorchester Democrat, refused to comment on the case.

The familys financial woes nearly sank Attorney General Tom Reillys
gubernatorial campaign earlier this year, when it was revealed within a day of St.
Fleurs announcement as his running mate that she and her husband were swimming in
tax liens and debt.

Reilly faced harsh criticism for tapping St. Fleur to be his running mate without
scrutinizing her long history of financial problems. State and federal records showed at
the time that St. Fleur had a $12,700 lien against her home for unpaid federal taxes and
owed $40,000 in federally backed college loans.

A Herald review of their household financial records shortly after the Reilly
controversy in February also found that the couple had not paid excise taxes.

Registry records showed Lauture had several unpaid Boston parking tickets, eight
license suspensions for unpaid traffic fines since 1988, and one revocation in 1998 for
passing three bad checks.

The couple drew a $12,700 lien against their Dorchester home because of tax debts from
1999 and 2003, according to federal records. The couple had three unpaid tax debts in the
past four years, including bills from the city of Boston totaling more than $7,100. Those
debts have since been paid.

St. Fleur, a state rep since 1999, also had a debt of more than $5,200 from December on
her campaign finance account and had faced a previous enforcement action for improperly
using $5,000 of her campaign finance money to pay for a Honda wagon in 2001, state records
show.